Gregorio López y Fuentes (born Nov. 17, 1895, Huasteca, Veracruz, Mex.—died Dec. 10, 1966, Mexico City) was a novelist who was one of the most important chroniclers of the Mexican Revolution and its effects.
In his youth he spent much time in his father’s general store, where he came in contact with the Indians, farmers, and labourers of the region, whose lives he would later describe with deep insight. After unsuccessful efforts at poetry and novels, he began to draw upon his experiences in the Revolution. His first success, Campamento (1931; “Encampment”), was followed by several others dealing with aspects of the Revolution, including Tierra (1932; “Earth”), a novel about the Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata; ¡Mi general! (1934; “My General!”), a work on the lives of generals after the Revolution; and El indio (1935; “The Indian”), a fictional study of the life of Mexico’s indigenous race, his most celebrated work.